Axis History Forum

This is an apolitical forum for discussions on the Axis nations and related topics hosted by the Axis History Factbook in cooperation with Christian Ankerstjerne’s Panzerworld and Christoph Awender's WW2 day by day.
Founded in 1999.

Hello,
I just purchased a postcard that has a 1919 cancellation on its rear side. The card depicts an area of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire after it was broken appart. I've translated the card the read, Confinement! Confinement! Never! at the bottom it states it was published by the National Propaganda Committee. The treaty of Trianon was signed with Hungary on June 4, 1920. Does anyone know what group published this card? Whom did the National Propaganda Committee belond to?
James

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I was wondering if there were many people out there who had relatives in Hungary who suffered from the Treaty Of Trianon? My mother's mother was from the village of Olcsva-Apati, which is about 1 1/2 hours by car north-east of Debrecen, near the Ukrainian border. Some of her relatives ended up in Rumania. My mother's father's family were from the village of Harmacz, which ended up in south-central Slovakia. Are there any other horror stories out there?

October - November 1918, during the "Revolution of Aster" (Õszirózsás forradalom) started the Hungarian National Council's posters of print.
It established the National Propaganda Committee (Országos Propaganda Bizottság), who usually made posters, cards and leaflets against the country dismemberment.
That time born from Trianon name the famous slogan (tria non = three no) "Nem! Nem! Soha!" = " No! No! Never!".
This poster (James's postcard) made before 4. June 1920, this explain not the later ruling, but just actually state for the Hungarian border. The protests wasn't effect.

Source:
Hungary in the first world war

Milán

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I noticed that the postcards JLEE and Milán posted are some different from the Hungarian boundary nowadays. In the first one, Hungary kept Ruthenia and part of Banat. And the second one described a Hungarian nation including western Banat. Were they designed and published before the boundary was finally defined?

Windward wrote:I noticed that the postcards JLEE and Milán posted are some different from the Hungarian boundary nowadays. In the first one, Hungary kept Ruthenia and part of Banat. And the second one described a Hungarian nation including western Banat. Were they designed and published before the boundary was finally defined?

Those postcards made before 4. June 1920 (signature of the Trianon Treaty), the graphic show just the actually borders in the Trianon discussion time.
Milán